Online Encyclopedia

GANJAM

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V11, Page 452 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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GANJAM  , a

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district of
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British India, in the extreme north-east of the
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Madras
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Presidency . It has an
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area of 8372 sq. m . Much of the district is exceedingly mountainous and rocky, but is interspersed with open valleys and fertile plains . Pleasantgroves of trees in the plains give to the scenery a greener appearance than is usually met with in the districts to the south . The mountainous tract known as the Maliyas, or chain of the Eastern Ghats, has an
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average height of about 2000 ft.—its
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principal peaks being Singharaj (4976 ft.), Mahendragiri (4923) and Devagiri (4535) . The hilly region forms the agency of Ganjam, with an area of 3483 sq. m. and a population (in 1901) of 321,114, mostly wild backward tribes, incapable of being governed under ordinary conditions and therefore ruled by an agent of the governor with
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special powers . The chief rivers are the Rushikulya, the Vamsadhara and the Languliya . The sea and
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river
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fisheries afford a livelihood to a considerable section of the population . The hilly region abounds in forests consisting principally of sal, with satin-wood, ebony and sandal-wood in smaller quantities . Ganjam formed
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part of the ancient
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kingdom of Kalinga . Its early
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history is involved in obscurity, and it was not till after the Gajapati dynasty ascended the
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throne of
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Orissa that this tract became even nominally a part of their dominions . Owing to the nature of the country the rising
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Mahommedan power was long kept at
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bay; and it was not till nearly a century after the first invasion of Orissa that a Mahommedan governor was sent to govern the
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Chicacole Circars, which included the
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present district of Ganjam .

In 1753 Chicacole, with the

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Northern Circars, were made over to the French by Salabat Jang for the maintenance of his French auxiliaries . In 1759 Masulipatam was taken by an
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English force sent from Bengal, and the French were compelled to abandon Ganjam and their other factories in the north . In 1765 the Northern Circars (including Ganjam) were granted to the English by imperial firman, and in August 1768 an English factory was founded at Ganjam, protected by a fort . The present district of Ganjam was constituted in 1802 . In the earlier years of British
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rule considerable difficulty was experienced in the administration of the district; and on more than one occasion the refractory large landholders had to be coerced by means of
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regular troops . In 1816 Ganjam was overrun by the
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Pindaris; and in 1836 occurred the Gumsur
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campaign, when the British first came into contact with the aboriginal Kondhs, the suppression of whose practice of human sacrifice was successfully accomplished . A petty rising of a section of theKondhs occurred in 1865, which was, however, suppressed without the aid of regular troops . In 1901 the pop. of the district was 2,010,256, showing an increase of 20 % in the decade . There are two systems of government irrigation: (1) the Rushikulya project, and (2) the Ganjam minor rivers
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system . The principal crops are rice, other food grains,
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pulse, oil seeds and a little
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sugar-
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cane and cotton . Salt is evaporated, as a government monopoly, along the coast . Sugar is refined, according to German methods, at Aska, where rum also is produced .

A considerable

trade is conducted at the ports of Gopalpur and Calingapatam, which are only open roadsteads . The district is traversed throughout by the East Coast railway (Bengal-
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Nagpur system), which was opened from
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Calcutta to Madras in 1900 . There are colleges at Berhampore and Parlakimedi . The headquarters station is Berhampore; the
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town of Ganjam occupied this position till 1815, when it was found unhealthy, and its importance has since declined .

End of Article: GANJAM
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JEAN NICOLAS GANNAL (1791-1852)

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